500-year-old shipwrecks could be key to predicting hurricanes

Shipwrecks in the Caribbean have been used as an indication of
hurricane activity, finds new research that could shed light on
the relationship of global warming and these storms.

The study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, considered records of Spanish shipwrecks in
the region and correlated those with tree-ring records.

The results found a staggering drop in hurricane activity of 75
percent in the years 1645-1715, coinciding with lower sunspot
activity and cooler temperatures on Earth, providing important
insights for future weather forecasts.

“We found that in the years when many ships wrecked in the
Caribbean, the trees in Florida Keys showed the same signal that
trees show during hurricanes,” says lead author Valerie Trouet,
an associate professor in the University of Arizona Laboratory of
Tree-Ring Research, in a telephone interview with The Christian
Science Monitor.

“So, that gave an indication that we could use shipwreck records
as a proxy for hurricane activity.”

When hurricanes assail the Florida coastline, trees lose
branches, as well as leaves and needles. Because trees rely on
these appendages for photosynthesis, and thereby for growth, in a
year when they are struck by such storms – and the year following
– these activities are restricted, resulting in much narrower
tree rings.

That's why Florida coastal tree-ring records give a good
indication of hurricane activity in the area.

The team then looked at Spanish shipwreck records for the region,
in part because they were maintained meticulously, in part
because the Spaniards started visiting the Caribbean earlier than
any of the other colonizing nations.

In looking at the past five centuries, the researchers found that
the 75 percent drop in hurricanes between 1645-1715 coincided
with a known climatic event, the Maunder Minimum, which was a
time of cooler temperatures on Earth, including the oceans.

“The number of hurricanes is to a large extent dependent on the
temperature of the oceans. So, with cooler oceans, you get fewer
hurricanes,” Dr. Trouet tells the Monitor. “Basically, you need
ocean temperatures above 26.8/26.9 degrees Celsius to produce
hurricanes. That’s why you get hurricanes in the Caribbean and
Asia, but not off the coast of England or up in Maine, because
the temperatures there simply aren’t high enough.”

This new study is important because it gives us a deeper glimpse
into the history of hurricanes, and into the factors that affect
them.

While there has been previous work looking at the chronology of
these storms, most of that has employed data from lake sediment,
which generally provides a resolution down to the century level.

This new method brings that down to 10-15 years, or even an
annual scale, as well as providing a tool that can consider
regional variation, rather than just focusing on global trends.

Perhaps most interesting of all, however, was the link they found
with levels of solar radiation.

“The relationship between hurricanes and the energy budget of the
Earth is changing – greenhouse emissions are changing that – and
we don’t really know how hurricanes will react to this change,”
says Trouet.

So the correlation they found between the Maunder Minimum and a
huge lull in hurricane activity was critical.

Of course, “you can never fully exclude the possibility that it
is a coincidence or that other factors came into play (e.g.,
technological advances, wars, etc.),” as Trouet herself admits in
a follow-up email. “That being said, we have done all possible
sensitivity tests that we could think of to verify our results.”

Is there a link between
low hurricane activity and historical events or
trends?TripAdvisor

The researchers compared the percentage of shipwrecks to the
absolute number of Spanish ships in the Caribbean at any given
time. They considered the number of years per decade that saw
more than one shipwreck, rather than just using the absolute
numbers of wrecks.

“We are therefore quite confident that it is the climatic
situation during the Maunder Minimum (MM) that has caused the
shipwreck drop and not other factors,” says Trouet.

Going forward, there is already interest from the other side of
the pond to look at a database of shipwrecks off the coast of
England.

Trouet herself would like to expand her own study area up the
Atlantic coast and into the Gulf of Mexico, maybe into Asia, too,
if there are decent records.

“Historians are also interested: this was a period of lots of
historical change in the Caribbean, as well as slavery, piracy,”
Trouet tells the Monitor. “Is there a link between low hurricane
activity and historical events or trends?”